Table 1

Round 1 Characteristics of Older Adults Who Did and Did Not Lose a USC Over 6 Yearsa,b,c

CharacteristicUnweighted PopulationPercentages (n=7,226)Weighted Population Estimates (n =35,305,631)d
Lost USC, No. (%)Retained USC, No. (%)P ValueLost USC, %Retained USC, %P Value
Male186 (46)2,791 (41).044843.14
Age, y
 65–74169 (42)2,640 (39).295752.16
 75–84147 (37)2,750 (40)2934
 ≥8587 (21)1,433 (21)1413
Race/Ethnicityd
 White, non-Hispanic249 (62)4,769 (70).0017782.05
 Nonwhite, non-Hispanic118 (29)1,658 (24)1211
 Hispanic396 (6)36 (9)107
Marital status
 Married or with partner175 (43)3,463 (51).0044958.008
 Divorced, widowed, separated228 (57)3,360 (49)5142
Type of residence
 Community374 (93)6,467 (95).099095.005
 Residential care29 (7)356 (5)105
Education
 Less than high school diploma126 (31)1,799 (26).032421.27
 More than high school diploma277 (69)5,024 (74)7679
Census division
 Northeast73 (18)1,283 (19).821720.56
 Midwest97 (24)1,587 (23)2223
 South150 (37)2,652 (39)3837
 West83 (21)1,301 (19)2420
Self-Rated health
 Excellent/Very good160 (40)2,267 (39).834344.93
 Good130 (32)2,197 (32)3231
 Fair/Poor113 (28)2,002 (29)2525
Fallen in last year128 (32)2,146 (31).903430.20
Depressive symptoms74 (18)1,087 (16).201714.17
Number of chronic conditionsd
 0–1127 (32)1,634 (24).0013227.09
 2103 (26)1,712 (25)2625
 393 (23)1,590 (23)2222
 ≥480 (20)1,887 (28)2025
Admitted to hospital in last year98 (24)1,621 (24).802321.48
Needed self-care help in last year69 (17)1,307 (19).311616.81
Has a transportation barrier43 (11)518 (8).0386.03
Insurancee
 Supplemental or drug380 (94)6,562 (96).069496.11
 Medicaid74 (18)1,036 (15)1212.93
Income quartile, $
 1 (<13,000)118 (29)1,709 (25).0012420.003
 2 (13,001–25,000)125 (31)1,701 (25)2923
 3 (25,001–50,000)87 (22)1,776 (26)2428
 4 (>50,000)73 (18)1,637 (24)2330
  • USC = usual source of care.

    Note: Source: the 2011–2016 National Health and Aging Trends Study.26 Estimates have been weighted to reflect survey design.

  • a Includes community dwelling (n = 7,197) and residential care participants (n = 412) who completed a sample person interview. Excludes participants in residential care (n = 168) and participants in nursing home (n = 468) who did not complete a sample person interview.

  • b Only 583 participants (8%) required a proxy to complete the interview. There was no significant difference in respondent type (P=.61) between those who did and did not lose a usual source of care.

  • c For time-varying covariates, characteristics are reflective of baseline, round 1 (2011) responses rather than responses at the time of loss of USC.

  • d Percentages may not sum to 100% due to rounding.

  • e Insurance categories are not mutually exclusive, percentages will not sum to 100%.